After 220 years, several artifacts, some of which date as early as 1652, have been unveiled by officials on Tuesday. First buried at the Massachusetts State House in 1795 by then-Governor Samuel Adams and Paul Revere, the original time capsule, which includes old coins and documents, was recovered last month during an inspection of one of the Statehouse’s granite cornerstones after a reported water leak.
Before the capsule was revealed at the Museum of Fine Arts Tuesday evening, the museum director stated, “Tonight is a new chapter in a story that began in 1795.”
The contents of the 10-pound brass box, which include a collection of silver and copper coins, old newspapers, an engraved silver plate, a copper medal with George Washington on it. the seal of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, and a title page from the Massachusetts Colony Records, took several hours to take apart.
#Timecapsule was encased in plaster along with some coins that date back to 1652 & 1855. #7News #MFAtimecapsule pic.twitter.com/z0HJhuM08Q
— susantran (@susantran) January 6, 2015
The silver plaque inscribed by Paul Revere that conservationist says she can see fingerprints. #MFAtimecapsule pic.twitter.com/7UEG4jhJVF
— susantran (@susantran) January 7, 2015
Pamela Hatchfield, the head of objects conservation at the Museum of Fine Arts, said that it took over four hours for officials just to loosen the screws at the top of the box.
“Conservation happens at a glacial pace,” said Hatchfield. “If at any point we find things can be imperiled or damaged by removing them, we are going to have to stop. I do apologize in advance. We just do not know.”
Hatchfield added she was using tools such as a porcupine quill and her grandfather’s dental tool to slowly remove objects from the capsule. While looking at newspapers inside the box, she remarked, “the paper is in amazingly good condition.”









